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| <nettime> Moscow Times: Company Claims Patent on the Bottle |
<http://www.moscowtimes.ru/24-Jun-2000/stories/story2.html>
Saturday, June 24, 2000
Company Claims Patent on the Bottle
By Lyuba Pronina
Staff Writer
A company has managed to take out patents on all glass, plastic and
metal containers and is demanding that breweries throughout the
country pay it 0.5 percent royalties on every bottle or can they sell.
Intellect, a company specializing in legal advice on industrial
property rights, secured the patents from state patent agency
Rospatent and has sent letters to breweries offering a license so
brewers can continue to use bottles and cans.
Interfax reported Vladimir Shishin, head of the Brewers Association,
as saying Friday that Intellect's demands could cost beer makers 200
million rubles ($7 million) a year.
If Intellect was to succeed with other bottlers, it would receive huge
income from the sales of the 1.8 billion to 2 billion bottles that,
according to the Glass Research Institute, are produced in Russia each
year. The country has about 250 breweries and 500 non-alcoholic
beverage plants, the Brewers Association says.
The Encyclopedia Britannica says the Egyptians were producing glass
bottles before 1500 B.C. But that didn't stop Rospatent from issuing
the patent Oct. 20. It is now in the middle of an internal
investigation into whether it should have done so.
"If there was a mistake, then those responsible for it will bear the
consequences," said Alexander Ashikhin, director of the Federal
Institute of Industrial Property, a division of Rospatent which
advises the agency on whether patent applications should be approved.
"Someone might even be fired."
The institute, whose experts are retracing the steps taken to issue
the patent, is wary of saying the patent was issued in error. It said
it has ruled out the possibility that bribes were paid to get the
patent.
Critics say the patent application was written in complicated language
and pertained to a feature inherent in all bottles.
Intellect general director Vladimir Zaichenko said the company was set
up 1 1/2 years ago and has received hundreds of patents f on screws,
ball bearings, flasks, cisterns, ampules, railroad lines and other
everyday items.
It applied for the patents on bottles and cans on behalf of a client,
Technopolis, Zaichenko said. He refused to provide information on
Technopolis, saying only that "among other fields it's involved in
invention."
Zaichenko said inventors are not responsible for knowing whether their
inventions already exist. "If a patent is issued, then Rospatent
recognizes the idea as being original," he said. "They are the
experts."
Representatives of Moscow's breweries, among them such heavyweights
such as Ochakovo, Ostankino and Badayevsky, met this week to work out
a strategy to fight Intellect's claims.
The outraged breweries are planning to file an appeal to Rospatent's
appeal chamber challenging Intellect's bid to make them pay royalties
for items they have been using for decades. They accuse Rospatent of
not performing due diligence and Intellect of setting out to swindle
the industry.
"It smacks of an intellectual racket," said Tatyana Vakhnina of the
patent law firm Center-Innotek, which is advising Ochakovo brewery.
"We think this patent is not legitimate and we will ask the appeal
chamber to annul it. It [the patent application] was written so
cleverly that it will be difficult to overturn. But we have 100
percent confidence that we will release our clients from the
obligation to pay," Vakhnina said in a telephone interview.
Ochakovo director Alexei Kochetov was unavailable for comment.
Vakhnina said the bottle patent rewarded the creativity in the writing
of the patent application. The application was formulated in such
complicated language that, at first, even engineers were baffled, she
said.
Intellect's argument is based on geometrical features that are
inherent to all containers, Vakhina said. "It's Euclidean geometry. It
could be applied to an amphora," she said. "The invention is defined
in such a way that it embraces 90 percent of containers."
Valery Dzhermakyan, deputy director of the Federal Institute of
Industrial Property, said Intellect is interpreting the patent too
broadly. "It relates to products that already existed and therefore it
cannot universally apply to all containers in current use," he said.
Both Dzhermakyan and Vakhnina said nothing of the sort had happened
before.
Valeria Karpunina, technical director of Moskvoretsky brewery, which
also received Intellect's letter, said only a mathematician would have
seen through the patent application and it was no wonder Rospatent's
experts overlooked it.
"The beer industry is booming, and I think this is why they are using
us as a test case, but what they [Intellect] do can apply to any
industry f bottles, perfume containers, cartridges, rockets. With
this, they can extract tribute from everyone. It's sabotage," she
said.
Karpunina said Intellect had threatened to take the brewery to court
if it didn't comply.
Zaichenko denied Intellect had made any threats of court action,
saying the company has so far merely proposed license agreements.
He also dismissed the breweries' reaction as emotional, saying the
"patent is good and within the law."
He refused to comment on the precise nature of what is novel in the
patent or what proof Intellect has that breweries are violating patent
rights.
He also said that too much fuss was being made about the breweries and
that they were at the bottom of the list of Intellect's activities.
Industry insiders said Intellect's claims seemed absurd.
"It's nonsense," said Sergei Alexeyev, of the Glass Research Institute
marketing department. "You can patent a bottle only if it's original,
has an original lense, for example, or a label. This might be a case
of a group of people who got together to cheat everybody."
Sergei Mikheyev, director of Badayevsky brewery, said the bottle
claims reminded him of a feud this year over the Zhigulyovskoye beer
brand.
The brand was produced throughout the Soviet Union but was never
patented. Breweries were encouraged to promote the brand.
Many breweries inherited the brand after the Soviet Union broke up and
continued to produce it until a brewery in Samara claimed exclusive
rights after obtaining a patent for it. The brewery won a string of
court cases, but after competitors appealed to Rospatent, it withdrew
the patent.
Dzhermakyan said Intellect's demands could be considered extortion if
Rospatent's appeal chamber establishes that it is trying to extend its
patent to a product that had been in use before Intellect filed its
patent application.
He said that at the time the application was examined, papers that
could have stopped the patent from being approved might not have been
available to experts.
As for Intellect's claims against producers, they must be for a
concrete product, he said. "If, in the course of chamber hearings,
Intellect loses two to three patent cases, the other tens or hundreds
of patents they have will collapse like a house of cards."
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